Human Reviewed
Parent feedback
80 families found this review helpful
Christian Movie Review
Christopher Robin Christian Movie Review
(2018)Christopher Robin, the boy who had countless adventures in the Hundred Acre Wood, has grown up and lost his way. Now it’s up to his spirited and loveable stuffed animals, Winnie The Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, and the rest of the gang, to rekindle their friendship and remind him of endless days of childlike wonder and make-believe, when doing nothing was the very best something.
This gentle family film centers on rediscovering wonder, friendship, and the importance of family over constant work. The main discernment point for Christian parents is not harsh content so much as talking through how imagination, comfort, and meaning relate to real hope in Jesus Christ rather than nostalgia alone.
Start with the content rating, then use the Christian guidance rating to decide how much conversation your family may need.
Content Indicators
Reviewed 6 April 2026
Rachel focuses on animated films, family viewing habits, and helping parents spot worldview themes quickly.
Christopher Robin Christian Movie Review (2018)
Guidance: Talk Together
This gentle family film centers on rediscovering wonder, friendship, and the importance of family over constant work. The main discernment point for Christian parents is not harsh content so much as talking through how imagination, comfort, and meaning relate to real hope in Jesus Christ rather than nostalgia alone.
Why This Guidance Level
This lands in a discussion-advised range mainly because its message about healing through childhood wonder and imagination can open good family conversations about rest, joy, and priorities. Surface content is light, but parents may still want to help children distinguish between wholesome fantasy play and the deeper hope, identity, and peace Christians find in Christ.
Faith & Worldview Perspective
The film’s apparent heartbeat is that a burdened adult needs to recover joy, relational presence, and childlike wonder. That reflects something true: people can become consumed by work and neglect the gifts of family, rest, and gratitude. At the same time, the story seems to place strong emotional weight on nostalgia, imagination, and old comforts as a path to renewal. A Christian family may want to affirm play and delight as gifts from God while also noting that lasting restoration is not found in childhood feelings alone, but in the grace and hope of Jesus Christ. Parents may want to discuss the difference between healthy imagination and looking to created comforts as a source of ultimate rescue.
Truths Reflected
- Work can crowd out family, rest, and simple gratitude if it becomes too central.
- Friendship, tenderness, and childlike delight can help people remember what matters.
Tensions to Discuss
- The film may suggest that inner renewal comes mainly through nostalgia and imagination, which can fall short of the deeper hope Christians have in Christ.
- A childlike spirit is good, but it should not replace mature responsibility ordered under love for God and neighbor.
Content & Discernment Markers
Occult & Spiritual Content
- Fantasy elements appear tied to Winnie-the-Pooh and the Hundred Acre Wood rather than occult practice. The concern is less about dark spirituality and more about how magical or imaginary comfort can be treated as emotionally restorative. Parents may want to discuss how stories can stir wonder without becoming a substitute for hope in Christ.
Sexuality & Relationships
- No sexual material stands out in this title based on the the film. The relationship focus is family affection, friendship, and a husband-father learning to be present at home.
Identity Themes
- The story asks whether Christopher Robin is defined by productivity and duty or by deeper relational values. That can be a helpful conversation starter, but Christian families may want to add that our truest identity is not in work performance or childhood nostalgia, but in being made by God and, for believers, belonging to Jesus Christ.
Violence & Intensity
- No strong violence is indicated. Any tension is likely to be mild family-film peril or emotional stress rather than intense action.
Language & Humour
- No notable profanity or coarse humor stands out here from the what stands out in the film. Parents should expect a generally gentle tone unless they prefer to verify specifics themselves.
Other Content Notes
- A central theme is work-life imbalance, with Christopher Robin pulled toward career pressure while family and joy are neglected. This matters for Christian families because it can lead to a good talk about vocation, Sabbath-like rest, and loving people more than productivity.
Notable Moments
- Pooh returns: The key turning point is Winnie-the-Pooh reentering Christopher Robin’s adult life and prompting him to reconsider his priorities, especially around work, family, and joy.
Discussion Prompts
- Work, rest, and family priorities: What happens to a person when work becomes more important than the people God has placed in their life?
- Biblical guidance: Scripture calls us to work faithfully, but not to let labor rule our hearts or crowd out love, rest, and presence with others.
- Scripture: Ecclesiastes 4:6, Mark 8:36, Ephesians 5:15-16
- Childlike wonder and mature faith: What is good about being childlike in joy and trust, and what is different from being childish or irresponsible?
- Biblical guidance: Jesus welcomes childlike humility and trust, while also calling us to grow in wisdom and love.
- Scripture: Matthew 18:3-4, 1 Corinthians 13:11, James 1:5
- Where comfort and renewal come from: When someone feels tired, sad, or overwhelmed, where do they usually go for comfort? Where should we ultimately go?
- Biblical guidance: Stories, play, and friendship can be gifts, but lasting rest for the soul is found in Jesus Christ.
- Scripture: Matthew 11:28-30, Psalm 16:11, John 15:5
- Friendship and remembering what matters: How can a good friend help you when you are anxious, distracted, or forgetting what is important?
- Biblical guidance: God often uses loving relationships to encourage us, correct us, and turn our hearts back toward what is good.
- Scripture: Proverbs 17:17, Hebrews 10:24-25, Proverbs 27:17
Parent comments
Leave a comment on this review
Share a short note on Christopher Robin, or help other parents with discernment.
Submit will ask you to sign in first.
Weekend family picks
Get the short family movie list before the weekend
Example newsletter: 3 movies to watch this weekend with your family, plus one question to ask after the credits.
Sample: 3 movies to watch this weekend with your family
One cinema pick, one streaming pick, one conversation-starter pick.
Related Articles
A few bigger-picture reads for parents who want more context than a single review page can hold.
3 Family Movies To Watch With The Kids This Weekend
Three family movie options with quick Christian discernment notes, review links, and simple conversation prompts for parents.
Read article
Animal Farm And Talking With Kids About Power, Truth, And Sin
Animal Farm can help older children see how slogans, fear, and corrupted authority distort truth, but parents should frame the story with a biblical view of sin.
Read article
How To Talk With Kids About Beheading threats In Family Movies
A parent-friendly guide to discussing beheading threats in family movies through a Christian lens.
Read articleMore Reviews
Official regional ratings
Local ratings remain available for reference, but LionLens separates those classifications from Christian family discernment.
Review Method
How this review was prepared
LionLens reviews are written with subtitle and dialogue evidence where available, official regional ratings data, source research, and final human editorial review before publication.



